Arthur Schopenhauer, The World As Will And Representation, Volume 1
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- Publication date
- 1910
- Usage
- Public Domain Mark 1.0


- Topics
- Schopenhauer was a masterful writer whose clear, eloquent, and accessible prose stands in stark contrast to the dense, often impenetrable work of his German idealist contemporaries like Hegel.
- Collection
- opensource
- Language
- English
- Item Size
- 418.2M
To read Arthur Schopenhauer is to engage with a compelling and controversial philosophy that offers a starkly pessimistic, yet surprisingly consoling, perspective on human existence. He is worth reading for his lucid writing style, his profound influence on art and psychology, and his unique synthesis of Western and Eastern thought.
Schopenhauer's philosophy is an iconoclastic departure from the rationalist optimism that defined his contemporaries. His core concepts challenge conventional wisdom and offer a powerful alternative framework for viewing the world
The world as "Will" and "Representation": Building on Immanuel Kant's philosophy, Schopenhauer argued that the physical world we experience is merely our perception ("representation") of a deeper reality. This underlying force is a blind, insatiable, and irrational cosmic energy that he called the "Will". Every object and living thing is an objectification of this ceaseless striving, and we can observe it most directly through our own desires.
The suffering of existence: Because the Will is a cycle of unfulfillable desires, Schopenhauer famously concluded that "all life is suffering". Any pleasure we experience is fleeting and simply the temporary cessation of a want, which quickly gives way to boredom and a new desire. This places suffering at the very core of all being.
The path to tranquility: Despite his bleak outlook, Schopenhauer proposed paths for overcoming suffering. He identified three main avenues for escaping the servitude of the Will:
Aesthetic contemplation: By engaging with art, we can temporarily silence our desires and observe the world's Platonic Ideas—the essential forms of things—in a state of "will-less" perception. This provides a temporary, but deeply profound, relief from our endless cravings.
Compassion and morality: By recognizing that our individuality is an illusion, we can feel compassion for the shared suffering of all living beings. This awareness of our shared metaphysical substance with others provides an ethical foundation that allows us to quiet our egoistic desires.
Asceticism: The ultimate release comes from a complete denial of the "will-to-live." This ascetic resignation, in line with Eastern spiritual traditions, offers a pathway to lasting liberation.
- Addeddate
- 2025-10-01 03:18:55
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- arthur-schopenhauer-the-world-as-will-and-representation-volume-1
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